Posted on 03/14/2016 12:55:06 PM PDT by MarvinStinson
Obama administration officials called the Gold King Mine disaster in Colorado an accident, but an analysis of government documents and public statements makes clear the disaster was anything but accidental.
The Environmental Protection Agency intentionally opened up the abandoned mine, which unleashed 3 million gallons of toxic waste into nearby rivers that residents of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and the Navajo Nation depend upon for drinking water.
Agency administrator Gina McCarthy even called the mine spill an unfortunate accident in an Aug. 11, 2015, speech on the matter, but EPA officials have since been more cautious in describing the event.
McCarthy, for example, avoided labeling the spill an accident in her prepared testimony before House lawmakers in September, instead calling the spill an unfortunate incident. EPA spokesmen have also steered clear of calling Gold King Mine an accident.
As Administrator McCarthy has said, This was a tragic and unfortunate incident, and EPA has taken responsibility to ensure that it is cleaned up appropriately, an agency spokeswoman told TheDCNF.
EPAs internal report avoided using the term accident and called the mine blowout an incident. And another top agency official testifying before lawmakers in September echoed McCarthys refrain that the spill was an unfortunate incident.
Information the agency has received to date from both external and internal reviews of the matter has revealed no evidence that the blowout was in any way intentional, the spokeswoman said.
New evidence tells a different story. A newly released email between Obama administration officials following the August disaster shows EPA workers intentionally breached Gold King Mine.
There was nothing unintentional about EPAs actions with regard to breaching the mine, Utah Republican Rep. Rob Bishop told Department of the Interior (DOI) Secretary Sally Jewell during a hearing in early March. They fully intended to dig out the plug and breach it.
Bishops statement stems from a recently publicized email between Interior Department officials. Brent Lewis, who heads the Bureau of Land Managements abandoned mine program, wrote to colleagues that he had spoken to EPAs project manager and got the following information:
On 8/5/2015, the EPA was attempting to relieve hydrologic pressure behind a naturally collapsed adit/portal of the Gold King Mine, reads an attachment to Lewis Aug. 7 email, obtained by investigators for the House Committee on Natural Resources.
The EPAs plan was to slowly drain and treat enough mine water in order to access the inner mine working and assess options for controlling its discharge, reads the attachment. While removing small portions of the natural plug, the material catastrophically gave-way and released the mine water.
Lewis email directly contradicts Jewells testimony that the spill was an accident. Most recently, Jewell maintained the spill was an accident when Bishop confronted him with Lewis email. Jewell stuck to the story she gave Bishop and his committee when she first called the spill an accident.
While the EPA intentionally breached Gold King Mine, its likely they did not believe their actions would set loose 3 million gallons of toxic mine wastewater. Had the agency tested the mine for pressure and not dug directly into its entrance, the blowout might not have occurred.
Its also unclear why EPA decided to breach a mine they suspected to be pressurized without the proper equipment. Workers failed to bring a pump and a special drain pipe the day the mine was breached. These major oversights were included in EPA and Interior reports on the incident, but House investigators argue agencies attempted to conceal incompetence and negligence surrounding the spill.
The EPA-caused mine blowout contaminated rivers with 880,000 pounds of dangerous metals, such as lead and arsenic. The agency has since claimed the river is safe for humans, despite state and local complaints.
This is the first article in a four-part DCNF series investigating the Gold King Mine spill. In the following days, TheDCNF will highlight the major mistakes the EPA made that could have prevented the disaster, the agencys shifting accounts of what happened, and questionable aspects of an independent review of the spill.
This would have caused a complete, wall-to-wall, full international mega-scandal on the MSM if it had happened during a Republican scandal.
It would have taken the MSM at most a couple of weeks to figure out what Republican fat-cat donor benefitted from the accident.
Just think what would have happened if this occurred in the private sector...but instead, no firings, no finings and bonuses for all.
So I guess no one was responsible. I guess no one has been fired.
Should we thank this agency for protecting the environment? I guess the EPA will request more funding and authority now. Can’t let a good crisis go to waste.
We would do better to simply disband the EPA.
Yellow mine waste water is seen at the entrance to the Gold King Mine in San Juan County, Colorado, in this picture taken August 5, 2015.
Sounds more like a blunder than an accident.
A job poorly executed with no backup or failsafe.
Granted, what one calls it is a matter of playing with words.
There was no question that this plug didn’t fail of its own.
For more reasons than just this. Unfortunately, Mr. Trump pledged to keep them around when campaigning in Iowa.
a million pounds of heavy metals, it would have probably taken several centuries for that much to leach out of that mine if it hadn’t been plugged and flooded
If the mine owners did this, they would be in jail.
And tell again why Flint, Michigan is all over the news but this is buried.
Set a backfire on your own land which “accidentally” burns 30,000 acres and pull a “go to jail; do not pass Go” card.
On the other hand, dump 880,000 pounds of heavy metals into public drinking water and it is “just an accident”. Nobody even fired?!
I worked for a major oil company as an intern. I filed EPA reports on vapor losses and saw some of the EPA compliance paperwork during the 1970’s. The EPA got all bent out of shape when the coast guard reported a drip from a fuel loading coupling. It was described in terms of a few drips per minute. The fine was over $1,000.
She looks rather sporty!
And it will take years. Job security!!
And don't forget the extensive prison time for the top 10 people in the EPA management chain responsible for this "incident."
The EPA most certainly DID know 3 million gallons of toxic water would be released. They did it so it would be deemed a Super Fund site by obbama and they could get hands on a billion dollar slush fund.
Oil biodegrades after a few short years, even with out any clean up efforts, and oil in and of itself presents minimal health or environmental hazards..
Heavy metal contamination is forever and such concentrated deposits can cause serious health problems.
Bottle it and make conGrease drink it!
The plan was executed perfectly. What happened was planned. The EPA will get buckets of money and the media will cover for them.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.